From the
1971 album THE
TIME TO
LIVE IS NOW.
Buzzy Linhart's first of two albums for
Kama Sutra, three if you include the band
Music's on the Buddah-distributed Eleuthera
Records, 1971's
The Time to
Live Is Now has the songwriter playing with different styles and sounds in a setting that is not as refined as the
Eddie Kramer co-produced
Music album or
Barry Beckett and
Roger Hawkins' production of
1974's Pussycats Can Go
Far. But don't blame the artist for that. In an exclusive interview for the
All Media Guide conducted
February 28th,
2002, Linhart revealed some of the secrets of The Time
To Live Is Now:
Bill Takas and
Luther Rix, the bass player and drummer, are "world class jazz and classical musicians." Bill Takas spent nine years on the
Tonight Show, and they co-founded
Ten Wheel Drive (with
Genya Ravan; see the Construction #1 LP). "We had been performing eight-to-ten months as a trio, sometimes with sax
...it was supposed to be more [produced] like 'Pussycats' (Pussycats Can Go Far)...but [record exec]
Neil Bogart played this for a group of
30-something pros for
Buddah/Kama Sutra, and they got up out of their chairs and danced to it." That resulted in the late Neil Bogart deciding he wanted to release the roughs -- the rough vocals, the rough mix, even with a 32,
000 dollar budget, which was pretty good at that
point in time. They called this "rock-folk," rock with a jazz tinge as opposed to "jazz rock" that was
Blood, Sweat & Tears. Even in its raw form, it is great stuff. Linhart lifts lines from here and there. Four lines from the
Beatles'
1968 hit "
Lady Madonna" are taken almost verbatim in the title track -- "Who buys the money, when you pay the rent" -- while the strange "
Cheat Cheat Lied" is fused with
Percy Mayfield's "
Hit the Road Jack," Linhart lifting a melody and line from
Blind Faith's "
Presence of the Lord." On the following album,
Buzzy (also called "
The Black Album" as his 1969 outing on
Phillips was also titled Buzzy), he's more blatantly lifting "
What the World Needs Now Is
Love" for his "
Rollin' On" title. When he goes into
Chester Powers'
1963 composition "
Let's Get Together," you think he's absconding with lyrics and melody again, but it's actually a very cool cover of the
Youngbloods' "
Get Together," which hit for them in
1967 and 1969. It is charming, as is the first appearance of "
Friends," the
Barry Manilow-produced hit for
Bette Midler in
1973, re-cut by Buzzy on Pussycats Can Go Far and the only appearance here of friend
Moogy Klingman, in the capacity of co-writer. Most of the material is by Linhart, "
Good Face" being co-written with future Music bandmemberDoug
Rodrigues, while drummer and co-producer Luther Rix pens and sings "
Comin' Home." The group covers
Jordan Kaplan's "There's No
Need" with the legendary
Ken Ascher on piano, and
Jeannie Linhart does a vocal harmony on "
The Love's Still
Growing," but other than that, it's the three-piece unit producing and performing on this Kama Sutra debut album.
Todd Rundgren would come onboard to mix "
The Black Album,"
1972's Buzzy, which would replace Takas with
Danny Trifan on bass, and add
Jeff "Skunk" Baxter on guitar, but The Time to Live Is Now remains an important, albeit raw, document of a major talent emerging from the early '70s.
-Allmusic
- published: 13 Nov 2013
- views: 1191